“Limited buses are available, use local Metlink buses if possible,” the notice said.
“There is a shuttle service available between Crofton Downs to Ngaio.”
A landslip in the suburb of Wadestown has obstructed Wellington’s Johnsonville Line track, forcing Metlink to replace train services with buses. Photo / Ross Setford
Metlink and KiwiRail have been approached for comment.
It comes days after Wellington was hit by a deadly weather system that dumped a record amount of rain over the region.
More than 70mm of rainfall in one hour was recorded in parts of Wellington on Monday morning, triggering severe flooding in streets and homes across several southern suburbs.
One man in Brooklyn awoke to his bedroom wall imploding after the earthen bank his rental was built against collapsed into the home.
Earth Sciences New Zealand’s engineering geologist Kerry Leith told the Herald this week that the weather was very unusual, as the downpours were extremely localised and had concentrated impacts over a small area.
Although the storm had passed, Leith said the risk of slips remained high because of the sheer intensity of rainfall across the region and because slope stability in the surrounding hills had been significantly weakened.
He said infrastructure such as retaining walls and stormwater pipes may also have been damaged which, over time, could increase seepage into slopes and further destabilise the soil.
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